Taylor Scott International News
The rate of overall house price growth in the UK prime property market is expected to continue at much the same pace in 2016 as in 2015, with the regional variations remaining too. Average UK house prices rose 4.5% in 2015, according to the latest residential market update from real estate firm Knight Frank. Average values in prime central London rose by 1% last year on average, but the rate of growth varied across the capital while prime country house prices rose by 3.1% in 2015. The report says that the Bank of England’s decision to keep interest rates on hold in January, coupled with the continued fall in oil prices has prompted some economists to push back the date on which the first UK rate rise is expected to 2017. ‘A longer period of low mortgage rates, alongside firmer wage growth and a continued lack of new and second-hand housing stock, should continue to underpin overall pricing during 2016. Activity has been gradually picking up in recent years, but this trend is likely to be hampered by the continued lack of supply of homes coming to the market across the country,’ said Grainne Gilmore, head of residential research at Knight Frank. She also pointed out that the Government has announced a raft of new policies to boost the supply of housing, a recognition that housing is now one of the key areas of focus for the electorate. A breakdown of the figures in the report show that in prime central London the biggest rise in prices has been in Islington with growth of 6.4%, followed by City and Fringe at 5.7%, Marylebone at 4.7%, Mayfair at 3%, and Kensington at 2.5%. In St John’s Woods prices were unchanged and south of the river Southbank saw prices rise by 1.7% and Riverside growth of 4% but elsewhere prices fell, most notably a decline of 6.1% in Knightsbridge. Prices were down 3.8% in Notting Hill, by 3.7% in South Kensington, by 2.7% in Chelsea, by 1.8% in Hyde Park and by 0.2% Belgravia. Average rents across the country rose by 2.7% in the year to September, with the strongest rental growth across Greater London at 4.1% but rental growth in prime central London eased in the second half of last year, and now stands at 0.7%. This comes after prime central London rents peaked at 4.2% growth in May. ‘This market is quite seasonal, and closely linked to the financial services sector. As a result, rents have been affected by restructuring plans announced by major European banks,’ explained Gilmore. Prime rents increased by 2.7% in the South East and the East of England, by 2.1% in the East Midlands, by 1.9% in the West Midlands, by 1.8% in the South West, by 1.6% in Scotland, by 0.9% in Yorkshire and the Humber, by 0.7% in the North West and by 0.5% in Wales and the North East. The report points out that certain sections… Taylor Scott International
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